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The ferocious March storms
-- Providence, R.I., and other cities set a monthly record for precipitation, while Boston experienced its second-rainiest month since record keeping began
-- seem out of whack even with the findings in the report. "It's consistent, but it's way more than even the trends we've seen," he said. "It's anomalous for sure." Global warming skeptic Patrick Michaels, a senior fellow in environmental studies at the Cato Institute, said it would be unfair to use the recent floods as an example of what's in the study. "You can't take an individual event and say it's a product of a certain trend," Michaels said. Previous studies have shown that New England's wettest days of the year are getting wetter over time, but there was no net change nationwide, raising doubt as to whether global warming is the culprit, Michaels said. Whether warming is the cause or not, if rainstorms are getting fiercer, there will be a price to pay, some experts noted. "If you're spending more on dealing with extreme weather events, what does that take away from?" said Ross Gittell, an economics professor at UNH and executive committee member of Carbon Solutions New England. "Do you have to tax people more and that has a damper on the overall economy?" he said. "... Or does it take away from investments in education that could lead to more productivity and economic growth over time?"
[Associated
Press;
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